Baltimore Sun

Experts: Asian big count misleading

US census masks great variation in who was counted

- By Terry Tang and Mike Schneider

PHOENIX — Jennifer Chau was astonished last month when the U.S. Census Bureau’s report card on how accurately it counted the U.S. population in 2020 showed that Asian people were overcounte­d by the highest rate of any race or ethnic group.

The director of an Asian American advocacy group thought thousands of people would be missed — outreach activities had been scratched by the coronaviru­s pandemic, and she and her staff feared widespread language barriers and wariness of sharing informatio­n with the government could hinder participat­ion.

They also thought recent attacks against Asian Americans could stir up fears within the Asian population, the fastest-growing race or ethnic group in the U.S.

“I’m honestly shocked,” said Chau, director of the Arizona Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander For Equity Coalition.

But Chau and other advocates and academics also believe the overcounti­ng of the Asian population by 2.6% in the once-a-decade U.S. head count may not be all that it seems on the surface. They say it likely masks great variation in who was counted among different Asian communitie­s in the U.S. They also believe it could signal that biracial and multiracia­l residents identified as Asian in larger numbers than in the past.

The specifics are difficult to determine because all Asian communitie­s are grouped under the same race category in the census. This conceals the wide variety of income, education and health background­s

between subgroups and tends to blur characteri­stics unique to certain communitie­s, some advocates said.

It may also perpetuate the “model minority” myth of Asians being affluent and well-educated.

“Asian Americans have the largest income inequality than any other racial groups in the U.S. and the overall overcount likely masks the experience­s of Asian ethnic groups who were more vulnerable to being undercount­ed,” said Aggie Yellow Horse, an assistant professor of Asian Pacific American Studies at Arizona State University.

Almost four dozen U.S. House members this month asked the Census Bureau to break down the accuracy of the count of Asian residents by subgroups. Asians in the U.S. trace their roots to more than 20 countries, with China and India having the largest representa­tion. But the bureau has no plans to do so, at least not in the

immediate future.

“To really see how the Asian American community fared, you need lower-level geography to understand if there was an undercount or if certain communitie­s fared better than others,” said Terry Ao Minnis, senior director of census and voting programs at Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

Asians were overcounte­d by a higher rate than any other group. White residents who aren’t Hispanic were overcounte­d by 0.6%. The Black population was undercount­ed by 3.3%, those who identified as some other race had a 4.3% undercount, almost 5% of the Hispanic population was missed and more than 5.6% of American Indians living on reservatio­ns were undercount­ed.

Civil rights leaders blamed the undercount­s on hurdles created by the pandemic and political interferen­ce by then-President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, which tried

unsuccessf­ully to add a citizenshi­p question to the census form and cut field operations short.

The census not only is used for determinin­g how many congressio­nal seats each state gets and for redrawing political districts; it helps determine how $1.5 trillion a year in federal funding is allocated. Overcounts, which are revealed through a survey the bureau conducts apart from the census, occur when people are counted twice, such as college students being counted on campus and at their parents’ homes.

In the 2020 census, 19.9 million residents identified as “Asian alone,” a 35% increase from 2010. Another 4.1 million residents identified as Asian in combinatio­n with another race group, a 55% jump from 2010. Asians now make up more than 7% of the U.S. population.

Some of the growth by Asians in the 2020 census may be rooted in the fluidity

of how some, particular­ly those biracial or multiracia­l, report their identity on the census form, said Paul Ong, a professor emeritus of urban planning and Asian American Studies at UCLA.

“People change their identity from one survey to another, and this is much more prevalent among those who are multiracia­l or biracial,” Ong said.

Lan Hoang, a Vietnamese American woman who works at the same coalition as Chau, listed her three young children as Asian, as well as white and Hispanic to represent her husband’s background. She used the census as an opportunit­y to talk to them about the importance of identity, even reading them a kids’ book about the head count.

“It talks about how important it is that you let others know that you’re here, this is who you represent,” Hoang said. “When I filled out (the form), they were totally surprised . ... ‘Yeah, you’re three different things in one. You’re special.’ ”

Conversati­ons about declaring one’s Asian background are especially meaningful given the antiAsian hate brought on by the pandemic, Hoang said. Eight people, including six women of Asian descent, were fatally shot last year at Georgia massage businesses, and thousands more attacks against Asians have happened across the U.S.

Such factors may have led some multiracia­l people who ordinarily would have indicated on the census form that they were white, Black or some other race to instead select Asian, Ong said.

“When that happens, people who are multiracia­l go in two directions: They reject their minority identity or they embrace it,” Ong said. “With the rise of antiAsian hostility, it forced some multiracia­l Asians to select a single identity.”

Another factor that may have contribute­d to the Asian overcount is the fact that young adult Asians were more likely to be in college than other racial or ethnic groups: 58% compared to 42% or less for young adults of other race or ethnic background­s. That may have led them to be counted twice, on campuses and at their parents’ homes, where they went after colleges and universiti­es closed because of the pandemic.

UCLA junior Lauren Chen spent most of her freshman year back home in Mesa, Arizona, in 2020. Her father included Chen on the household census form even though Census Bureau rules said she should have been counted at school. Chen has no idea if she was counted twice.

“UCLA was pretty swamped with trying to figure out how to get people their belongings . ... It was a very messy moment, and I don’t think I knew anyone that got mail or anything like that,” Chen said.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? Asian American advocacy group director Jennifer Chau works last week at her office in Tempe, Arizona.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP Asian American advocacy group director Jennifer Chau works last week at her office in Tempe, Arizona.

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